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*Jewlsh Florid far
4 Number 37
Of South County
Serving Boca Raton, Defray Beach and Highland Beach
Boca Raton, Florida Friday, November6, 1982
Frrd Shochtr
Price '<> "in
laron Tells Inquiry Commission That There Was No Anticipation of
A Massacre When Israel Sent Phalangists Into Beirut Camps
By DAVID LANDAU
SRUSALEM (JTA) It was assumed that when
\el sent the Christian Phalangist forces into the Sabra
Shatila camps in West Beirut that there would be ci-
m deaths, Defense Minister Ariel Sharon told the
rial commission of inquiry
Jo one thought they (the Phalangists) would behave
m behave," he said. "But it is a very far cry from that
^mption to the anticipation of a bloody massacre .
of us, myself included, ever for one moment in our
st dreams anticipated or feared a horror like that."
iis distinction between
cipation of some
lian casualties and anti-
Ition of a massacre saw
|of the key themes in the
lie testimony of Sharon
(re the commission of
liry. He gave evidence
[pen court for more than
hours before chairman
Hice Yitzhak Kahan
that the rest of his
lence would be held
kind closed doors.
IE DEFENSE MINISTER
that no one in Israel, at any
}l of dicision-making, raised
thought of a potential
ksacre in prior consultations
fcerning the entry of the
[langists into the camps. This
ement, he said, included
buly Premier David Levy's
(lark at the Sept. 16 Cabinet
Bting referring to a possible
[ssacre. Sharon said Levy had
ot opposed" the decision to
W the Phalangists in.
Sharon said Israel's purpose in
ding the Phalangists into the
i-amps they were also
^ted to enter a third Beirut
np. Kafahani had been to
are Israel Defense Force lives.
recalled a long-standing
fcbinet policy decision from the
knd week of the Lebanon war
(involve the Christian forces in
fighting and said the decision
send them into the camps was
Defense Minister Ariel Sharon
the "military implementation" of
that political decision.
He noted in response to tough
questioning from commission
members that Phalangist partici-
pation in prior actions during the
war had been satisfactory from
the standpoint of their behavior
"very reasonable" was how he
described it.
SHARON CONCEDED, how-
ever, that in the years of civil
war before the IDF's entry into
Lebanon there had been in-
stances of Christian massacres of
Palestinians, citing Tel El-Zaatar
(1976) as an example. He
remarked in an aside that Amin
Gemayel, now Lebanon's Presi-
dent, has been actively involved
in that episode.
Sharon said the aim of the
IDF's entry into west Beirut
itself in the wake of President-
Elect Bashir Gemayel's assassin-
ation was "to crush" the remain-
ing (2,000) PLO terrorists there
and prevent them regrouping,
with the help of sympathetic left-
wing militias, and retaking key
areas of the city.
"We did all that was humanly
possible to prevent civilian casu-
alties," Sharon said of this IDF
action that had been decided on
by himself, Premier Menachem
Begin and Chief of Staff Gen.
Rafael Eitan at midnight, Sept.
14, several hours after the bomb
blast that killed Bashir Gemayel.
Regarding the massacre on the
night of Sept. 16 and Sept. 17 and
18, Sharon said he first heard of it
from Eitan, who phoned him at
his home on Sept. 17 at 9 p.m.
Eitan reported he had just
returned from Beirut where he
had given orders at noon that day
that the Phalangists be removed
from the two camps by 5 a.m. the
following morning (Sept. 18) and
that additional Phalangist forces
be prevented from reaching the
camps.
EITAN HAD told him that
civilians had been killed "beyond
what had been expected, "Sharon
recalled. Eitan had used the term,
"they over did it," he told the
commission.
Pressed by Justice Aharon
Barak why, having learned of the
killings, he permitted the
Phalangists to stay on till the
next morning, Sharon said that it
is hard for an armed unit to with-
draw fast from a built-up area
where fighting is in progress.
This was especially the case with
the Phalangist forces who lacked
communications equipment.
A subsequent phone call to him
at 11:30 p.m., on Sept. 17, from
Israel TV correspondent Ron
Ben-Yishai, with second-hand
reports from soldiers of killings in
the camps, had added nothing
Sharon said. It simply corrobor-
ated Eitan's information and
he (Sharon) was satisfied with
the actions taken by Eitan and
reported to him earlier.
THE DEFENSE MINISTER
said he had tried to phone Begin
during the morning of Sept. 18,
but the Premier was in
synagogue as it was Rosh
Hashanah. There were discus-
sions that morning with Eitan
and with Foreign Ministry Direc-
tor General David Kimche, and
Sharon stressed the IDF had
been ordered "to stop it, to pre-
vent further (Phalangist) forces
getting in and to drive those in,
out;"
After the story hit the new
media later that day, Sharon re-
Continued on Page 10
Emeth Cantorial Concert Features
Bitter, Grosz, and Zisook
Temple Emeth, 5780 W. At-
lantic Avenue in Defray Beach,
will host its second annual Can-
torial Concert on Sunday, Dec. 12
at 8 p.m. The program will fea-
ture Cantor Chaskele Ritter,
Cantor Erno Grosz, and Cantor
Seymour H. Zisook.
Cantor Chaskele Ritter of
Temple Hillel, North Woodmere,
New York made his cantorial and
radio debut in 1934 and in 1954
made his debut in television. He
sang for many heads of state:
Menachem Begin, Golda Meir,
Moshe Dayan, Eleanor Roose^
velt, etc. He appeared in concert
with Alan King, Ed Sullivan, Jan
Peerce and Roberta Peters.
Cantor Ritter is very well
known for interpreting liturgical
music, Yiddish Folk Song and Is-
raeli and Chassidic Music. He
made a wonderful impression on
last year'8 audience and Temple
Emeth is happy to have him ap-
pear at this Cantorial Concert.
Cantor Erno Grosz was born in
Hungary and at the age of 19 as-
sumed his first position in Buda-
pest. In 1957 Cantor Grosz came
to the U nited States and futhered
his ambition to train academical-
ly and musically for the Ameri-
can Cantorate. He studied under
such prominent musicians as
Siegfried Landau, and Dr. Hugo
Weisgall and Hazzanat with
Cantors Moshe Taube and Dr.
Cantor Erno Grosz
Max Wohlber. In 1963 he was
called upon by the Forest Hills
Jewish Center where he is now
serving.
Cantor Seymour H. Zisook.
cantor of Temple Emeth is wide-
ly acclaimed for his outstanding
musical abilities. He studied
voice and music theory at Roose-
velt University and graduated
Continued on Page 4-
Asks Diaspora to support security
Sharon: Lebanon Shan't Be In Vain
By DAVID LANDAU
JERUSALEM (JTA) De-
fense Minister Ariel Sharon is
calling on world Jewry to support
Israel in its insistence on mean-
ingful security arrangements in
south Lebanon.
Sharon made bis call in an ad-
dress to 1,000 United Jewish
Appeal leaders from the United
States attending "The Gather-
ing" in Israel.
Sharon met with the group at
the West Bank settlement of
Elkana. "The Gathering" was led
oy UJA National Chairman
Robert Loup and President Her-
schel Blumberg.
Sharon told the UJA leaders
that if Israel "does not stand firm
now ... we may reach the same
situation that we had before the
war" in Lebanon. "Nobody
wants to move the Israeli troops
out of Lebanon more than we do
ourselves," he assured the visi-
tors who responded with warm
applause.
"But it would be a major mis-
take if after so many sacrifices
and so many casualties we were
to move back without solving the
problem of the threat of terrorism
(returning to) Lebanon."
Standing on a hilltop in
Elkana, from which the Gush
Emunim settlers and visitors
have a wide view of the entire
coastal plain a spot where
Sharon frequently brings visitors
to explain his security views,
even though no UJA funds are
spent on the West Bank the
defense minister blamed the free
world for compromising with ter-
rorism instead of fighting terror-
ism.
Sharon declared that Israel
was determined that no "terrorist
bases, headquarters, units"
operate against her out of Leba-
non ever again. He said if the
United States was really inter-
ested in peace in Lebanon, it
could ensure that the Beirut gov-
ernment signed a formal peace
treaty with Israel "or at least
start a peace process."
Many in the audience ap-
plauded him and pressed him for
autographs.
The UJA gathering began
Monday evening at Modi in, the
ancient birthplace of the Macca-
bees. The group proceeded
directly there after arriving at
Ben Gurion Airport to meet with
President Yitzhak Navon.
The president dwelt on the
Rome terror attack, recalling
Italy's many past kindnesses to
its Jewish community. He noted
that Jews were not persecuted
under Mussolini's fascist regime,
and that Italians were coopera-
tive after the war with Jewish
"illegal" immigration efforts to
Palestine
He called on Jews abroad to
express solidarity with Italy's
Jews who were speaking out
against current manifestations of
anti-Semitism in their country.
\

i mi 111
Page 2

TheJeiiiinh Flnririinn nfSmith Cnnntii
The Jewish Floridian of South County
Friday, October 29, 1982
Friday, November 5, 1982
Arab World Needs Mubarak
More Than He Needs Them
By DAVID HAROUNOFT
London Chronicle Syndicate
Despite, or even because
of, the war in Lebanon,
President Mubarak has
demonstrated that the
Arab world needs Egypt
perhaps even more than
Egypt needs its Arab
neighbors. It looks as if
the policy initiated by the
late President Sadat is now
paying off.
President'Mubarak is now at
the center of the diplomatic
stage, acting as a trusted inter-
locutor not. only between the
United States and the Arab
world, but also between the Aral
world, the PLO and Israel.
It was widely assumed that
once Egypt recovered the Sinai,
the faintest raising of tension in
the region would be exploited as a
pretext for Egypt for evading the
Camp David peace process.
YET DURING the initial
stages of the war, a number of
prominent Egyptian officials
attempted to play down the mag-
nitude of the conflict. They de-
scribed the Israeli armored thrust
into Lebanon as merely part of a
plan to capture and divert the
Litani waters to Israel a
curious theory long-held by
former Foreign Minister Riad.
The Lebanese war raged, an Arab
capital was besieged and finally
invaded, and Cairo responded
merely with routine calls for an
Israeli withdrawal. It was only
after the Sabra-Shatilla massacre
that President Mubarak recalled
Saad Mortada, his ambassador to
Israel, for "consultations."
Arab states like Jordan, Saudi
Arabia and even Syria appeared
to look for Egyptian diplomatic
intervention in order to preserve
some vestige of credibility in the
face of their military impotence,
and the rising tide of local funda-
mentalism. This diplomacy came
in two forms: the draft Franco-
Egyptian resolution to the UN
security Council during the inva-
sion, and latent coordination with
the U.S. Administration in
presenting President Reagan's
peace plan on the Middle East.
Significantly. Egypt is the
only major Arab country to have
escaped scathing rebuke by the
PLO. And throughout the war
the PLO representative, Ahmad
Sidqi Dajani, maintained the
most cordial relations with the
Egyptian government.
I ...WAKIED...
CQHDOUTO SOCIAL BOOTS
WHOWUTTOHITEnni
A WIDE VARIETY OF BUDCET TOVKS
* *
BURT REYNOLDS DINNER THEATER
MUSICIANA SUPPER CLUB
TOURS OF PALM BEACH AND
MUCH MUCH MORE"
<4ii mm r nt ix nrj miimui
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-ovuiocmwg r*iM mm m
iflMniu inw *t uMAt* na
WIST PALM m A. M U* ;
(MS) 455-SMO
(411 IH*P44IMjrU4U(%4
cau mm oonrr ooay
MANY OATIS MAVf AlMtADY MIS V*D
ARAB OBJECTIONS to
Egypt's formal return to the
Arab fold stems from Egyptian
determination to maintain a
dialogue and normal relations
with Israel. The plain fact that
Egypt has gained more for the
Arab cause through negotiations
in pledging Israel to grant some
form of Palestinian self-
determination, is slowly being
borne in on its neighbors. The
conclusions of the recent Fez
Summit underline this point.
President Mubarak is now
facing internal pressure that will
have a direct bearing on which
way Egypt goes from here. The
expected appointment of a vice
president is going to be an im-
portant indicator. Kamal Hassan
Ali. the present foreign minister,
is seen as the favorite. If he is ap-
pointed, the foreign policy
launched by Sadat and taken
over by Mubarak is likely to con-
tinue uninterrupted.
Another runner has emerged in
the person of Aziz Sodqi, a
former minister of industry
under Nasser. The source of
much speculation, he has been
seen regularly at public functions
with senior government officials.
The announcement of Sodqi's
possible appointment by Mub-
arak can be viewed as an attempt
to reconcile the ruling National
Democratic Party with opposi-
tion elements.
THE EGYPTIAN president
has only latterly come to appre-
ciate that his efforts in greater
democratization must inevitably-
lead to some kind of power
sharing with the country's small
but vocal opposition. And, on the
evidence of the increasing circu-
lation of the various radical party
organs, such opposition is grow-
ing.
Khaled Mohieddin's Unionist
Progressive Party, for example,
is likely to attract potent support
on two of his party's major
planks. First, rapid action to halt
Egypt'8 declining economy,
which would entail in turn, re-
versing Sadat's "Open Door"
policy that led to a catastrophic
rise in imports (Israeli exports to
Egypt amounting to $13 million
in 1981 are a likely target). Sec-
ondly, a break in realtions with
I srael.
Mubarak is alert to pervasive
fears that the 1977 food riots may
be repeated this time with fun-
damentalist participation. He has
already authorized legislative
measures to curb imports, by de-
manding that traders produce
documents showing the non-
availability of local goods before
imports are authorized.
Publisher Levy
Dead in Paris
At Age 83
PARIS-(JT A)-Robert
Calmann-Levy, one of France's
best known publishers who
headed the family book empire
for over 40 years, died Oct. 13 at
the age of 83. He was the third
generation owner-manager of the
Calmann-Levi publishing empire
and the man who brought to
French readers the books of
Arthur Koestler, Hannah
Arendt, Jules Isaac and Jacquest
Ellul, a combat pilot with the
French Air Force during World
War I. He was an officer in the
legion of Honor and was awarded
the Militatry Cross for his war-
time activities.
Following the bloody terrorist attack on the
Rome synagogue on Oct. 9 in which a young
child was killed and over 30 others seriously
wounded, the Simon Wiesenthal Center or-
ganized a major protest rally recently in
front of the Italian consulate in Los Angeles.
Participants included students and faculty
from Yeshiva University of Los Angeles,
Holocaust survivors and representatives
from the Rabbinic Zionist Council of Califor-
nia and Young Israel.
Career Women*
Join Us At Our First Meeting
Of The 1982-1983 Season
Presentation by: Rabbi Bruce S. Warshal
Topic: Sex, "The New Morality" and Judaism
Date: Monday, November 15,1982 7:30p.m.
* All women actively involved in business endeavors are invited
to join us. For those who have not received an invitation,
please call the Federation office at 368-2737
KOSHER STANDARDS
The Vaad Hakashrut, the Commission on Kosher standards, of the
South County Rabbinical Association, under the sponsorship of the South
County Jewish Federation, is pleased to announce that the following
establishment has its full supervision and hechsher (kosher certification).
TRI KOSHER
6600 W. Atlantic Avenue
Delray Beach, Fl.
The Vaad Hakashrut is South County's central communal agency
upholding the standards of Jewish law pertaining to kashrut, the kosher
dietary laws.
This is not to imply that any other meat markets in
South County are not kosher. The Vaad (Kosher
Commission) has no knowledge of the state of
kashrut of these markets since they are not under
the supervision of the Vaad.
Rabbi Dr. Louis L. Sacks, Chairman, Vaad Hakashrut
Rabbi Bernard A. Silver, Co-chairman
*zL*

Ugly Campaign
Arab Agents Challenge Aid to Israel
By BORIS 8M0LAR
'Accountability' Called
'Hypocritical' by Theologians
A massive and ugly
propaganda campaign is
now being developed in this
country by Arab agents
and pro-Arab elements to
influence Congress to vote
against giving American
aid to Israel. The campaign
is being carried through
large advertisements in
newspaper in 50 cities.
The basic text of the costly ad
is the same for all the newspapers
accepting it not all newspapers
accept it, recognizing its mali-
ciously misleading contents
but the text is slyly adjusted to
each city to appeal to innocent
Americans locally.
Asserting that Israel "spent
$2.5 billion in three weeks to kill
people in Lebanon," the inciting
ad asks provocatively whether
the money given to Israel could
not be "better spent" for the
benefit of the population of the
city where the advertisement is
carried. The ad is placed by a
group calling itself American-
Arab Anti-Discrimination Com-
mittee and gives an address in
Washington. It urges the readers
"to write or call Congressmen
and Senators to stop American
foreign aid to Israel."
THE CAMPAIGN obviously
speculates on the fact that the
forthcoming session of Congress
will have a substantial number of
new representatives and senators
who might be influence by voters
in the cities where they are cur-
rently running for reelection. The
Arab propaganda machine is
clearly figuring that its ad may
influeence also older members of
both houses of Congress who are
not up for reelection this year but
are confused about Israel because
of the Lebanon issue.
The expensive advertisement
which is obviously funded by
Arab oil governments and by
some American firms dealing
with these governments does
not mention, naturally, that Arab
countries are also receiving sub-
stantial financial aid from the
United States.
Nor does it mention the fact
that the Palestine Liberation Or-
ganization is being financed by
Saudi Arabia to the tune of SI
million a day, and that the Soviet
government is according to a
report by the Central Intelligence
Agency allocating about $200
million annually for "national
liberation" movements abroad,
the largest part of which goes to
the PLO for terrorist activities.
NATIONAL JEWISH or-
ganizations are mobilizing them-
selves to fight this Arab cam-
paign. Because the inciting Arab
ad is focusing on sensitive issues
B nth has alerted its regional of- JjgJ wjuj a meMage from i9.
leadership is therefore preparing
itself for working with President
Reagan and Congress to insure
the support of the request of close
to $2.5 billion for Israel in grants
and loans in the 1983 budget.
THERE IS special need now to
demonstrate to the American
public and to Congress that it is
in America's interest to maintain
militarily and economically a
strong Israel as the only demo-
cracy in the Middle East upon
whom the U.S. can depend to th-
wart Moscow's ambition to make
inroads into the area. The Krem-
lin has already gained strong in-
fluence in Syria and Iraq. In the
Lebanon war alone, Israel de-
feated two surrogates of the So-
viet Union the PLO and Syria
thus weakening Soviet in-
terests in the area.
With the PLO and their sup-
porters now choosing Washing-
ton as their real battlefield, Jew-
ish leaders fear that while Israel's
operation in Lebanon resulted in
the military destruction of the
PLO, pro-Arab petrodollars may
obtain a PLO victory in the U.S.
Members of Congress are
aware of the close ties that have
existed for years between the
PLO leadership and the Kremlin.
At least 70 summit meetings
have taken place during the last
five years between the PLO top
leaders and Soviet military com-
mand.
THE COMPLETE backing of
the PLO by Moscow and its
satellite countries in the United
Nations and at every interna-
tional forum is also well known.
The PLO representative to the
UN, Zehdi Terzi, has admitted in
an interview, carried by the Pub-
be Broadcasting Service, that
Palestinian terrorists are getting
training on a regular basis in the
Soviet Union.
It is estimated by competent
authorities that approximately
4,000 PLO terrorists were trained
in the last few years in Soviet
training camps in the use of
weaponry, sabotage tactics, ex-
plosives, terror and guerrilla war-
fare. In the current operations in
Lebanon, Israel captured
thousands of weapons supplied
by the Soviet government to the
PLO, including enough heavy ar-
tillery pieces to furnish six
brigades, many Katyusha rocket
launchers, tanks and anti-tank
missiles, armored personnel car-
riers and more than 4,000 tons of
ammunition.
The PLO has made it very
clear that it stands against the
United States. Its security chief,
Abu Ayad, openly stated in an
interview quoted by the Asso-
ciated Press that the PLO would
have allowed the Soviets "a
thousand bases" against the
United States if it controlled
land.
IN LIGHT of the intention of
the PLO to secure control of the
West Bank and the Gaxa area,
now held by Israel, and declare
itself a government in these terri-
tories, it can be realized by every
thinking American what the
United State stands to lose to the
Soviet Union by cutting military
and financial support to Israel.
Gaza, which lies on the shores of
the Mediterranean, can easily be
converted into a Soviet naval
base, if the PLO succeeds in
reaching its goal of establishing
an indendent Palestinian state.
JTA FtmlunSyndtcait
NEW YORK (JTA) -
A group of 14 Christian
theologians, most of them
long-time supporters of
Israel, issued a joint state-
ment declaring that "the
voices of conscience" call-
ing for the "establishment
of accountability" regard-
ing the role of Israeli au-
thorities in the massacre of
Palestinians in west Beirut
refugee camps "are mixed
with a chorus of cynicism,
hypocrisy and bigotry."
The theologians, members of
the Israel Study Group, stated:
"The history of anti-Semitism
demonstrates that the world has
too often remained silent in the
face of atrocities except when
Israel stands accused. We have
observed that people who in the
case of Hiroshima,
Nagasaki, as in the case of
My Lai and Cambodia and the at-
rocites committed by the PLO,
have remained silent, are now
stridently raising their voices in
condemnation of Israel. We have
observed also that little or no
criticism has been levelled
against the real perpetrators of
the massacres, the Phalangists, a
Christian militia."
NOTING THAT "many of the
Jewish sister and brothers in the
U.S. and Israel have called for an
accounting for the massacres in
Lebanon regardless of where the
blame may fall," the theologians
stated that they stand with "our
Israeli friends" as they "endure
this painful soul-searching" and
at the same time "we as Chris-
tians confess our own sins of
silence, hostility and indifference
which have so often contributed
to these tragic situations."
Among those who signed the
statement at the Israel Study
Group's semi-annual meeting in
Weston Priory. Weston, VT,
several days ago, were Sisters
Rose Thering and Ann Patrick
Ware, Prof. John Pawlikowski,
Rev. Edward Flannery, and Rev.
Isaac Rottenberg.

First Israel Envoy to Egypt
Lauds Operation in Lebanon
TORONTO (JTA) -
Israel's incursion into Le-
banon was defended here
by Eliahu Ben-Elissar,
chairman of the Knesset
Foreign Affairs and Se-
curity Committee and Is-
rael's first Ambassador to
Egypt. He told some 1,400
delegates and guests at-
tending the B'nai B'rith
International convention
that Israel's military action
in Lebanon was necessary
for the elimination of the
PLO infrastructure and
gaining the security of Is-
rael.
Ben-Elissar stated that the Is-
raelis now want to leave Lebanon
as soon as possible. Complete
withdrawal will take place as
soon as the remnants of the PLO
have been before we should have
responded?" he asked. Israel, he
said, cannot afford the luxury of
gambling with its security.
Boca Raton
DldM TOBY DGCK!MGR
INTERIOR DESIGN
[ices across the country to react
in the form of a letter to the
editor campaign in any news-
paper in their region carrying the
deceptive ad.
The U.S. government is com-
mitted to Israel for the year 1963
under the Foreign Aid Bill (HR
6370). The bill provides for fl.7
million in military assistance and
'85 million in economic support.
It has already completed the
Congressional committee
process, and is awaiting action on
the floor of both the Senate and
the House when Congress re-
sumes its session. A congres-
sional debate on the bill is antici-
pated this fall.
It is feared that there may be a
tendency on the part of some
members of Congress to take a
position that Israel needs less in
terms of military supplies and
equipment because of the demon-
stration of Israel's strength in
toe war in Lebanon. Jewish
raeli Premier Menachem Begin,
stated that Jews have learned
painfully from a long history that
all Jews are responsible for the
survival and well-being of each
other.
"WE HAD to enter Lebanon
for one main reason," he said.
The PLO had turned Lebanon
- which used to be an indepen-
dent sovereign state into a
PLO state, not to make it a new
Palestine, but to make it the base
for attacks on Israel."
Citing the huge caches of arms
and miles of tunnels discovered
under and around Beirut, Ben-
Elissar asked: "Should Israel
have left to the PLO the opportu-
nity to choose the time of at-
tack?" He added that he did not
believe that the PLO could have
defeated Israel but it could have
caused many casualties. "How
many casualties should there
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